Mr HOCKEY (North Sydney—The Treasurer) (14:14): I welcome that question from the member for McMahon. I will tell you why. He asked me about whether I was sloppy or dodgy with the numbers. The member for McMahon said in 2010— Mr Bowen interjecting— Mr HOCKEY: How about this? The government— Mr Bowen interjecting— Mr HOCKEY: Listen, son. You cannot white— Mr Bowen interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for McMahon! Mr HOCKEY: Liquid paper is not around anymore, but we still have the words: … the Government has returned the Budget to surplus three years ahead of schedule and ahead of any other major advanced economy, and the debt and deficit campaign is now exposed for the fraud that it always was. The Labor government that has not delivered a surplus since Bob Hawke was Prime Minister, the Labor Party that did not deliver a surplus in the lifetime of Wyatt Roy, the member for Longman! The Labor Party last delivered a surplus before he was born. And yet the member for McMahon, who does not know the difference between net debt and gross debt and put it in writing, who does not know the currency of China and who claimed a surplus, has the gall to ask about being sloppy. CommSec, as they admitted, got it wrong. That is why I cited CommSec. But in fact CommSec said that the figure about 2002 goes to New South Wales. Mr Dreyfus interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Isaacs will desist— Mr Bowen interjecting— Ms Plibersek interjecting— The SPEAKER: as will the members for McMahon and Sydney! Mr HOCKEY: Remember New South Wales—the state that the member for McMahon comes from? Mr Thistlethwaite interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for Kingsford Smith is warned. Mr HOCKEY: In fact, retail sales figures on a trend basis are better than at any time since 2010. Let me see. Who was in government? Who was the Treasurer between 2010 and now— Mr Bowen interjecting— The SPEAKER: The member for McMahon is warned. Mr HOCKEY: who saw retail sales figures at a lesser rate than occurred under us? Who was that? The member for McMahon. How about that? The words come back on you, old son. Mr Bowen: Madam Speaker, I seek leave to table the Hansard of yesterday and the reports of several economic agencies showing retail trade growth at 5.1 per cent, not 7.4. The SPEAKER: The member will resume his seat. Firstly, you are not permitted to seek to table a document which is already a public document. I would have thought Hansard was pretty public. As to the second document, is leave granted? Leave not granted.